2007 picture of Ray Sparre

Insightful Musings on the Scriptures

by

Raymond P. Sparre
Northwest University class of '67



June 8, 2015
kittens nursing

Hello, dear people.

Another very warm day is heating up. Becki didn’t join me on my little jog this morning. She wanted more time to prepare for her Bible Study session at Woodburn. I played another trick on the dogs by driving a hundred yards down the road, parking, and jogging from there. Upon my return, I gave the dogs a good workout at the creek, throwing a ball up the creek for one dog and down the creek for the other.

Just for the fun of it, I’ll attach a photo I took yesterday. I’ll call it “Kitty Contentment.”

Lots to fill my list and my time today. I better keep moving.

Love, Dad/Ray.


08 June
Luke 12:22-48
Focus: "Be dressed ready for service and keep your lamps burning.” Luke 12:35.

There is a huge amount of inspiration and guidance that can be gleaned from this passage. I could get carried away. But I’ll try to hold my “focus” to this one phrase. (I hope you read the passage.)

A very good place to draw some practical meaning from this idea of being “dressed ready for service” is Ephesians 6. That’s where Paul presents the required apparel of the Christian soldier. Even that metaphor is significant—meaning that we’re not only called to be sons and servants, but soldiers—meaning that there is warfare to wage—meaning that there is a spiritual battle over the territory of the eternal souls of men. In review, those vital pieces of apparel to continually wear in the battle zone of life are truth (true thinking that flows from God’s Word), righteousness (right relationship with God), training (knowing what you believe and why), faith (believing God enough to obey Him), salvation (the composite result of all the above), and “the sword of the Spirit which is the word of God (Eph. 6:10-18)—not only a means of defense, but our only means of offense.

We could quote Psalm 119:105 to mix in some amplification of “keep your lamps burning.” It goes, “Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light for my path.” Without the illumination of His Word, we are indeed walking in the dark. But with it, being infilled and enlightened by it, we actually become a special kind of light in this dark world. Make no mistake about it. This is God’s intent for your role and function. In the process, you’re not going to “win them all,” but you can “let your little light shine.” Read again Matthew 5:13-16.

Do you see in this the all-encompassing importance of God’s Word? So why would we ever think we could fare well without its guidance and influence?

“God’s Word is like a highway sign.
You don’t have to pay any attention to it if you don’t care what happens to you.”